USA > Connecticut > Evening post annual, Biographical sketches [with portraits] of the state officers, representatives in Congress, governor's staff, and senators and members of the General assembly of the state of Connecticut, 1885 > Part 1
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REYNOLDS HISTORICAL GENEALOGY COLLECTION
3 1833 01147 3565
A
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ARTISTIC HOUSE-FURNISHING!
WM. H. POST & CO., 428 AND 430 MAIN STREET, HARTFORD, CONN.,
arpets,
5
Curtains, Decorations,
Laper-Hangings,
RUGS,
CARPETS
W.H.POST& CO
MATS,
WH. POST& CO
RPE
PAPER
HANGINGS AINS
R P
PLUSHES, PORTIERRES,
FRINGES.
A house furnished in good taste is a source of refinement and education. It costs no more to furnish in good taste than otherwise. We solicit an examination of the Largest and most Varied Assortment of Carpets ever seen under one roof in New England.
We offer for your inspection, Gobelin, Axminster, The Royal or Tourney Velvet. Moquette, Wilton. Body Brussels, Tapestry Brussels, Three-Ply, Art Ingrain, Extra Superfine Ingrain, and Oriental and American Rugs in almost endless variety of style and quality.
Carpets from 25 cts. to $5 per yard; Window Curtains from $1 to $500 per window; Window Shades from 25 cts. to $25 each; Paper Hangings from 10 cts. to $25 per roll; Mats and Rugs from 50 cts. to $500 each. Carpets made and laid in all parts of the country.
The Trade of Country Merchants solicited, and Prices Guaranteed.
We Make a Specialty of House-Furnishing.
Whoever may chance to read this notice is invited to examine the stock, whether wishing to purchase or not.
All goods guaranteed as recommended. It will pay you, reader, to look for Carpets, Curtains, and Paper Hangings at the House-Furnishing store of
WILLIAM H. POST,
WM. H. POST & CO. 428 AND 430 MAIN STREET.
EDGAR S. YERGASON.
HARTFORD. CONN
OIL CLOTHS,
LIGNUM, LINOLEUM,
FURNITURE COVERING,
WINDOW-SHADES,
TABLE AND PIANO-COVERS,
430 WILLIAM . H. POST & CON
32
MANTEL-SCARFS,
CARPETS OIL CLOTHS
CURTAIN
MATTINGS,
SEIDLER & MAY,
MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN
ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE! 14 TO 16 FORD ST., HARTFORD, CONN.
PARLOR SUITS, CHAMBER SUITS,
FURNITURE FOR THE LIBRARY, DINING-ROOM, KITCHEN, AND HALL, FURNITURE FOR HOTELS, OFFICES, CHURCHES, PUBLIC BUILDINGS, AND EVERY OTHER PLACE WHERE FURNITURE MAY BE NEEDED.
THE LARGEST STOCK AND LOWEST PRICES OF ANY HOUSE IN THE STATE!
WE ARE MANUFACTURERS OF THE
PATENT SOFA BED SEIDLER & MAY -AND-
ALWAYS IN STOCK.
A FULL LINE OF WHICH GOODS ARE
ADJUSTABLE EXTENSION CHAIR.
OUR ASSORTMENT OF CHOICE PARLOR AND CHAMBER SUITS will be found to be as rich and stylish as those of any house in New York or Boston, with prices much below those markets.
Extensive purchasers will find that very favorable contracts may be made with us, for everything that may be desired in any of the departments above named.
An inspection of our goods and prices is respectfully solicited.
GEORGE N. SEIDLER.
CHARLES MAY.
SEIDLER & MAY, 14 to 16 FORD STREET, HARTFORD, CONN.
WE Will Remove to our New Block on Pearl Street, near the corner of Ford Street, about May 1st. Special Prices before Removal.
(From the Hartford Post.)
A Model Furniture House.
Among the steadily progressive and prosperous business firms in Hart- ford there is none more conspicuous or deserving than that of Messrs. Seidler & May, the well-known furniture manufacturers and dealers on Ford Street. They have long been in business at the present old stand, where they have built up a trade and a reputation which is probably second to no other of its kind in Connecticut. The proprietors are gen- tlemen in the best sense, their goods always prove to be precisely as rep resented, they keep thoroughly up with the market in styles and designs, and their prices are always reasonable. Their establishment is extensive
and they carry in stock everything that may be required for the complete furnishing of dwellings, offices, and public buildings. Their manufactory has facilities for supplying specialties to order at the shortest notice, and they employ in this department skilled workmen to whom may be profita- bly entrusted the most delicate or elaborate article of cabinet architect- ure. It is a pleasure to be able thus truthfully to speak a word in com- mendation of an honorable firm, and to publicly record their prosperity. Seidler & May are erecting for their own use and occupancy a fine new block on Pearl Street, a few rods from their present location, to which they expect to remove about May first. When completed it will probably be the finest furniture warehouse in the State, if not in New England. It is but reasonable to presume that the new establishment will be head- quarters for the best furniture trade of the commonwealth.
ÆTNA INSURANCE COMPANY,
OF HARTFORD, CONN.
INCORPORATED, A.D. 1819.
LOSSES PAID IN SIXTY-SIX YEARS.
$57,300,000!
CASH CAPITAL, -
$4,000,000.00
Reserve for Re-Insurance (Fire),
1,722,614.20
(Inland), -
37,592.93
Reserve for Unpaid Losses (Fire), -
201,594.66
66 66
(Inland),
28,504.79
Other Claims, -
58,720.27
Net Surplus, -
2,964,490.55
TOTAL ASSETS, January 1, 1885,
$9,013,517.40
LUCIUS J. HENDEE, President.
JOTHAM GOODNOW, Secretary.
WM. B. CLARK, Assistant Secretary.
WHAT THE NEWSPAPERS SAY OF THE ÆTNA:
(From the Hartford Post.)
The Ætna Insurance Company.
It is scarcely necessary to call attention to the conspicuous statement of the Ætna Insurance Company promulgated the first of the new year. The public generally, throughont the country, look for the annual statement of this great con- pany with something of the interest which at- taches to the annual reports of the Secretary of the national treasury ; for its stock is held not only in Hartford and other portions of Connec- ticut, but also in New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, California, Virginia, Michigan, Alabama, Maine, Vermont, Kentucky, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Delaware, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Wisconsin, Maryland, South Carolina, New Jersey, Montana, the Dis- trict of Columbia, Ontario, Nova Scotia, Que- bec, London, and Paris. Its business is in every State in the Union, and in pretty much every civilized country on the face of the globe. Its capital is larger by a million dollars than any other fire company in the country, and the pro- tection which it affords to its policy-holders is as nearly absolute as anything appertaining to hin- man instrumentality possibly can be. Its divi-
go into eighty-five towns and cities of Connec. ticut, and among twenty- four States of the Union. Its assets approach ten millions of dollars, its net surplus is about three millions, and the losses which it has paid during the sixty-six years of its existence, exceed the enormous aggregate of fifty-seven millions ! Facts and figures like these convey a fair impression of the adamantine so- lidity of this "leading fre insurance company of America," while they account in a large measure for the universal pub ic confidence which reposes in this institution as in perhaps no other of the kind on this or any other con- tinent.
(From the Hartford (brunt.)
The Etna insurance Company.
Entrenched behind its millions, the .Etna offers complete protection to the insured, and it never was stronger than it is to-day. Its long recenl of honorably-paid losses reaches back over sixty. six years, and during that time it has paid to the insured $57,800,000. It paid every loss in 00l at the time of the Boston and Chicago fires, when cipal bonds
Etna Fire Insurance Comcan).
This is a remark kde -any-pourkulde lo
surplus is why $3510 ) . com
in bank tii carry it (brunch a Are vonal ts rim
a single divinaod ins sinck may wovon about as sal an lavacompl os sesiblingin de market, short of Givryament, ssare, wr M
dends, paid with the regularity of the seasons, so many companies has always paid in full Ita reread and zaman in themselves worth millions and the pussy has the absnicts roofdenos of Its burless mun ity
curinest stopress and Its growth in ger - portions than abr icher bri llenmy of this country las -ver alla -1 Fris a med. of $180.00\ \ bas mami Is SURE
1851.
THIRTY-FOURTH ANNUAL STATEMENT 1885
OF THE
Phoenix Mutual
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, OF HARTFORD, CONN.
ASSETS, JANUARY 1, 1885.
Loans on First Mortgages on Real Estate,
$6,237,053.94
Real Estate unencumbered,
1,305,629.31
Premium Notes on Policies in force, .
1,409,646.59
United States Bonds, .
212,631.25
('ity, Municipal, and Railroad Bonds, .
774,016.50
Bank Stocks,
153,638.00
Loan on Collateral,
2,000.00
Cash on hand and in Bank,
182,940.06
$10,277,555.64
ADD :
Market Value of Stocks and Bonds over cost, .
$70,827.00
Interest accrued and due on Mortgages,
149,330.46
Deferred and Outstanding Premiums, .
53,542.73
273,700.19
Gross Assets, January 1, 1885,
$10,551,255.83
LIABILITIES.
Reserve on Policies in force at four per cent. interest (Conn. and Mass. standard),
$9,280,722.00
Claims by Death outstanding, .
152,528.00
Premiums paid in advance.
5,422.78
Loading on deferred and outstanding Premiums,
13,385.68
Contingent reserve on policy account, .
65,394.00
Special reserve,
150,000.00
$9,667,452.46
Surplus at 4 per cent. (Conn. and Mass. Standard),
$883,803.37
Surplus at 4} per cent. (New York Standard),
1,436,980.37
BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
EDSON FESSENDEN, President Hartford Hospital.
GEORGE W. MOORE, President Mechanics Savings Bank.
NEWTON CASE, Pres't The Case, Lockwood & Brainard Co.
AARON C. GOODMAN, Pres't Phoenix Mutual Life Ins. Co. JONA. B. BUNCE, Vice-Pres't Phoenix Mutual Life Ins. Co.
CHARLES S. GOODWIN, Merchant, 279 Main St., Hartford. DRAYTON HILLYER, Pres't Hartford Engineering Co.
JAMES NICHOLS, Secretary National Fire Insurance Co.
JOHN C. PARSONS, Vice-Pres't Hartford Soc'y for Savings. JOHN M. HOLCOMBE, Sec'y Phoenix Mutual Life Ins. Co. RICHARD F. GOODMAN, Editor, Newton, N. J.
OFFICERS. AARON C. GOODMAN, President.
JONATHAN B. BUNCE, Vice-President. JOHN M. HOLCOMBE, Secretary.
The PHENIX
INSURANCE COMPANY,
OF HARTFORD, CONN.
CAPITAL, - - - -
-
-
- $2,000,000.00
Assets, January 1, 1885, -
-
- 4,316,957.91
Total Losses Paid, - - - -
- 18,985,928.07
SUMMARY FROM STATEMENT, JANUARY 1, 1885.
Cash Capital, - -
- - - - -
$2,000,000.00
Reserve for Unadjusted Losses, - -
- 257,608.78
Reserve for Re-insurance, -
1,286,661.94
- - Net Surplus, - - - 1 -
- 772.687.19
Surplus as to Policy-holders, -
-
-
2,772,687.19
We invite attention to the above figures, as evidence of the protection afforded by a Policy in the PHOENIX.
DIRECTORS.
JOSEPH MERRIMAN,
MILO HUNT,
STEPHEN A. HUBBARD, LYMAN B. JEWELL
CHARLES M. BEACH,
PLINY JEWELL,
GEORGE W. MOORE,
HENRY A. REDFIELD,
HENRY KELLOGG,
FRANKLIN CHAMBERLIN,
ASA W. JILLSON,
CHARLES H. SMITH
GEORGE RIPLEY, Boston
OFFICERS.
H. KELLOGG, President.
D. W. C. SKILTON, Secretary.
A. W. JILLSON. Vice-President.
G. H. BURDICK, Ass't Secretary.
H. M. MAGILL, Gen'l Agent, Western Department, Cincinnati, Ohio. A. E. MAGILL, Gen'l Agent, Pacific Department, San Francisco, Cal.
G. WELLS ROOT. CORNELIUS B. ERWIN, N Britain. LORING P. HAWES, New York
HENRY K. MORGAN,
ERASTUS H. CROSBY,
DO NOT FORGET
-THAT -
THE TRAVELERS
Is the Largest Accident Company in the World.
THAT IT IS THE ONLY LARGE
ONE IN AMERICA. That it Pays $4,000 a Day for Losses by Death and Disabling Injury.
That it has Paid $10,500,000 to Policy-Holders since 1864.
That ONE IN NINE of All Insured Under its Accident Policies Have Received Fatal or Disabling Injuries .
That it is also a Life Company, With LARGER ASSETS in proportion to its Liabilities than any other Successful Company.
THAT IT SECURES FULL PAYMENT
-BY
$7,826,000 ASSETS. $1,947,000 SURPLUS. NOT BY AN EMPTY TREASURY AND ASSESSMENTS ON THE SURVIVORS.
THAT ITS POLICIES ARE ALL NON-FORFEITABLE;
An Accident Policy-holder may change his occupation, a Life Policy holder may let his premiums lapse (after three years), and each still receive an equitable proportionate Insurance.
THAT IT PAYS ALL CLAIMS, LIFE AND ACCIDENT, WITHOUT DISCOUNT, And immediately upon receipt of satisfactory proofs.
That its Rates are as low as will PERMANENTLY secure FULL PAYMENT of the FACE VALUE of Policies.
150th
$1885.3%
SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THE
HARTFORD
FIRE = INSURANCE COMPANY, OF HARTFORD, CONN.
CAPITAL, $1,250,000.
ABSTRACT OF STATEMENT, JANUARY 1, 1885.
ASSETS.
Cash on hand, in Bank, and Cash Items,
347,772.26
Cash in hands of Agents and in course of Transmission,
Rents and Accrued Interest,
26,821.94
Real Estate Unencumbered, 639,616.60
972,855.89
Loans on Bond and Mortgage (1st lien),
351.125.09
Loans on Collateral Security, -
Bank Stock, Hartford, Market Value,
345,009.00 232,170 00
New York,
:3,081.60
66 Boston, 60
$0.850.00
Albany and Montreal,
337,720.00
State, City, and Railroad Bonds,
545,170 00
United States Bonds,
$4,491.S30.01
LIABILITIES.
All Outstanding Claims,
8292.719.69
GEORGE L. CHASE, President. C. B. WHITING, Secretary. P. C. ROYCE, Assistant Secretary.
Agencies in all prominent localities throughout the United States and Canada.
Railroad Stock, -
231.610.00
$306,295.72
ÆTNA
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, -OF-
HARTFORD, CONN.
ASSETS, January 1, 1885,
$29,771,230.04
LIABILITIES, by Connecticut and Massachusetts Standards,
24,789,784 72
SURPLUS, by Connecticut and Massachusetts Standards, 4,981,445,32
.6
by New York Standard, over
-
-
6,440,000.00
MORGAN G. BULKELEY, President.
J. C. WEBSTER, Vice-President.
J. L. ENGLISH, Secretary.
H. W. ST. JOHN, Actuary.
GURDON W. RUSSELL, M.D., Consulting Physician.
EVENING POST ANNUAL,
1885.
have 1882-1889 1142 1895
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES
[WITH PORTRAITS]
OF THE
STATE OFFICERS, REPRESENTATIVES IN CONGRESS, GOVERNOR'S STAFF, AND SENATORS AND MEMBERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
OF THE
STATE OF CONNECTICUT.
PUBLISHED ANNUALLY. [ELEVENTH YEAR.]
HARTFORD, CONN .: EVENING POST ASSOCIATION. 1885.
THE CASE, LOCKWOOD & BRAINARD COMPANY, PRINTERS AND BINDERS, HARTFORD, CONN.
THE HARTFORD EVENING POST
Daily, Four Editions, Eight Dollars per year.
THE CONNECTICUT POST,
Weekly, Every Saturday, One Dollar and Fifty Cents per year.
EVENING POST ASSOCIATION, PUBLISHERS, 25 Asylum Street, Hartford, Conn.
We beg to call the attention of the public to the regular Daily and Weekly issues of THE POST, as above indicated, and to remark that in everything that constitutes a first-class journal, THE POST intends always to be fully abreast of its contemporaries at home or abroad. Acquaintance with a newspaper must furnish the most satisfactory test of excellence; and since familiarity with THE POST always impresses in its favor, we respectfully recommend it to the notice of any reader of this paragraph who may not already be included among its permanent patrons.
THE EVENING POST ANNUAL FOR 1885.
The Publishers of THE POST experience great pleasure in presenting another volume of "THE EVENING POST ANNUAL," for 1885, issued in the same attractive style as preceding numbers which have proved so popular with the subjects of the sketches and the public generally. The great amount of information contained in these volumes concerning the distinguished gentlemen who compose the legislative and executive departments of the State government, with the portraits of so many, render this publication an increasingly valuable and interesting contribution to the literature of the State.
We take pleasure also in commending to the attention of the reader the commercial pages of this Annual, which partake of the same representative character as the body of the work itself. The corporations, firms, and business houses which have their announcements in these pages do not need our endorsement. They are as widely known as the State itself, and will be recognized as old acquaintances and valued friends by a great many among the thousands of readers under whose observation this volume will pass.
Since this annual is to be reproduced yearly with every assembling of a new Legislature, it will doubtless be the wish of many to secure complete sets of the work from its beginning. We have a few copies yet on hand of the Annual for previous years, and can supply a limited demand for them in connection with the present issue.
EVENING POST ASSOCIATION,
25 ASYLUM STREET, - - - HARTFORD, CONN.
1839432
INDEX.
PAGE.
Governor Henry B. Harrison (Portrait),
9
REPRESENTATIVES.
HARTFORD COUNTY.
Charles M. Joslyn of Hartford, 94
George O. Kinne of Hartford, 94
George N. Phelps of Avon, 94
GOVERNOR'S STAFF.
Adj .- Gen. Stephen R. Smith (Portrait),
21
Q. M .- Gen. Arthur L. Goodrich (Portrait),
22
P. M .- Gen. Henry C. Dwight (Portrait),
22
Com .- Gen. Frederick Barton (Portrait), 23
Surg .- Gen. Henry P. Geib (Portrait),
24
AIDES-DE-CAMP.
Col. William C. Mowry (Portrait),
27
Col. William E. Hyde (Portrait), 27
Col. Tracy B. Warren (Portrait), 28
Col. Charles H. R. Nott (Portrait),
27
Col. George M. White (Portrait), 28
Lt .- Col. Bernard F. Blakeslee (Portrait), 29
U. S. Senator Orville H. Platt (Portrait),
31
U. S. Senator Joseph R. Hawley (Portrait), 33
Congressman John R. Buck (Portrait), 35
87
Orton B. French of Hartland.
George W. Emmons of Hartland. 100
Harry G. Cheney of Manchester, 100 100 John W. Day of Marlborough, Charles H. Arnold of Manchester, 100 Philip Corbin of New Britain, 102 Alonzo McManus of New Britain, 100 Elias M. Steele of Newington. 102 102
Wait R. Griswold, Jr., of Rocky Hill,
102
6th Hon. William H. Golden, Jr. (Portrait), 66
53
Edward A. Freeman of Simsbury,
103 103
Daniel R. Hubbard of Southington,
1033
Elisha J. Neale of Southington.
103
Olin Wheeler of South Windsor,
10 108
11th
16
Hon. Joseph C. Crandall (Portrait),
63
Edmund Halliday of Suffield,
James P. Spencer of Suffield, 104
101
George W. Harris of Wethersfield.
104
William L. Willard of Wethersfieldl.
104
Francis F. Curry of Windsor.
104
16th
Hon. Smith P. Glover (Portrait), . Hon. James B. Tatem (Portrait),
73
17th
Hon. Thomas G. Clarke (Portrait),
75
18th 19th
66 Hon. Milo B. Richardson (Portrait),
79
20th Hon. Horace D. Curtiss (Portrait),
21st
66 Hon. John Allen (Portrait),
22d
Hon. Joseph W. Alsop (Portrait),
23d
66 Hon. Milo W. Pember (Portrait),
89
Dwight L Johnson of Bethany,
106
Henry D. Linsley of Branford. 106
Henry E. Howe of Cheshire. 10G
91
Edward T. Cornwall of Cheshire.
100
2d
Hon. Maro S. Chapman (Portrait),
45
3d
Hon. Theodore M. Maltbie (Portrait), 47
4th Hon. Edward B. Dunbar (Portrait), 66
49
5th
Hon. Edward T. Turner (Portrait),
51
7th
Hon. Edmund Day (Portrait),
8th
Hon. A. Heaton Robertson (Portrait), Hon. Stiles T. Stanton (Portrait),
55 57 59
10th
Hon. John Brewster (Portrait),
61
12th
Hon. R. Jay Walsh (Portrait),
65
13th
Hon. Asa Smith (Portrait),
14th
66 Hon. Daniel N. Morgan (Portrait),
67 69 71
Edward D. Coogan of Windsor Locks.
104
NEW HAVEN COUNTY.
Alexander Troup of New Haven (Portrait), 105
James P. Pigott of New Haven, 106
Homer D. Bronson of Beacon Falls, 106
24th
Hon. J. Dwight Chaffee (Portrait),
SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE.
Hon. William Edgar Simonds (Portrait),
PAGE.
Lieut .- Governor Lorrin A. Cooke (Portrait), 11
Secretary Charles A. Russell (Portrait), 13
Treasurer Valentine B. Chamberlain (Portrait), 15
Comptroller Luzerne I. Munson (Portrait),
17
Andrew J. Warner of Berlin, 90 96 George F. Capen of Bloomfield, Isaac W. Beach of Bristol (Portrait), John H. Sessions of Bristol (Portrait), Adna N. Barnes of Burlington, 93 9. 96 91 96 William Edgar Simonds of Canton (Speaker),
Henry L. Clark of East Granby,
Patrick Garvan of East Hartford (Portrait),
George W. Darlin of East Hartford (Portrait),
Clinton T. Inslee of East Windsor,
Levi Parsons of East Windsor,
James B. Houston of Enfield,
Henry Abbe of Enfield,
Erastus Gay of Farmington,
Samuel Frisbie of Farmington,
Sturges P. Turner of Glastonbury,
James O. Griswold of Glastonbury,
Marshall A. Colton of Granby,
Condit Hayes of Granby,
98 9 100
Charles L. Mitchell (Portrait),
John T. Wait (Portrait), 39
Edward W. Seymour (Portrait), 41
STATE SENATORS.
1st District-Hon. Francis B. Cooley (Portrait), 43
Robert C. Usher of Plainville,
Henry O. Wilcox of Simsbury,
9th
15th
66 Hon. Wheelock T. Batcheller (Portrait),
81 83 85
Edward L. Mix of West Hartford (Portrait),
Henry J. Fenton of Windsor, 104
99 90 96 96 90 98
4
Franklin D. Jackson of Derby,
106
Alexander R. T. Nichols of Fairfield,
Jonah C. Platt of Derby,
108
Samuel S. Ambler of Bethel,
126
Justin Bradley of East Haven,
108
Thomas P. Bristoll of Brookfield,
126
Wallace G. Fowler of Guilford,
108
Alfred N. Wildman of Danbury, 126
Edgar P. Rossiter of Guilford,
108
Samuel Gregory of Danbury,
126
Henry W. Munson of Hamden,
108
Vincent Colyer of Darien,
127
Harvey E. Cruttenden of Madison,
108
George S. Platt of Easton,
127
William Wallace Lee of Meriden (Portrait),
107
Nehemiah H. Husted of Greenwich,
128
Charles H. S. Davis of Meriden,
110
Cornelius Mead of Greenwich,
128
Edmund B. Hoyt of Middlebury,
110
Edward S. Hawley of Huntington,
128
George M. Gunn of Milford (Portrait),
109
Orville H. Hull of Monroe,
128
Henry C. Miles of Milford,
110
Benjamin P. Mead of New Canaan,
128
George S. Andrew of Naugatuck,
110
Hendrick H. Wildman of New Fairfield (Portrait),
125
Josiah A. Smith of North Branford,
112
Michael J. Houlihan of Newtown,
128
Isaac L. Stiles of North Haven (Portrait),
111
Daniel Camp of Newtown,
128
James Graham of Orange (Portrait),
113
Andrew J. Crofut of Norwalk,
128
Charles H. Butler of Oxford,
112
Platt Price of Norwalk,
129
George R. Morse of Prospect,
112
John N. Nickerson of Redding,
129
Horace Q. Judd of Seymour,
112
Uriah S. Griffin of Redding,
129
George N. Platt of Southbury,
112
Francis H. Stalford of Ridgefield,
129 129
Thomas Kennedy 2d of Wallingford,
114
George A. Barnes of Sherman,
129
Calvin H. Carter of Waterbury,
114
George H. Hoyt of Stamford,
129
Frederick J. Brown of Waterbury,
114
John H. Swartwout of Stamford,
129
Charles S. Tuttle of Wolcott,
114
Bradley Nichols of Stratford,
130
Hobart R. Wheeler of Trumbull,
130
George A. Sturges of Weston,
130
Charles Mills of Westport,
130
Sherman Morehouse of Wilton,
130
George Williams of New London (Portrait),
115
William M. Stark of New London,
116
David S. Gilmour of Norwich,
116
Frank A. Mitchell of Norwich,
116
Henry N. Ford of Bozrah,
116
Thomas K. Fitts of Ashford,
132
Edward M. Brown of Colchester,
116
William A. Buxton of Ashford,
132
Clarence H. Norton of Colchester,
118
George L. Cary of Canterbury,
132
Calvin S. Davis of East Lyme,
118
Charles Bennett of Canterbury,
132
John Owen Smith of Franklin,
118
C. Edwin Griggs of Chaplin,
132
Allen B. Burleson of Griswold (Portrait),
117
Charles O. Warren of Eastford,
134
E. Burrows Brown of Groton,
118
Edgar H. Newton of Hampton,
134
Edwin S. White of Groton,
118
John W. Randall of Killingly,
134
J. Henry King of Lebanon,
118
John Waldo of Killingly,
134
Joseph G. Davoll of Lebanon,
118
Philip Mathewson of Plainfield,
134
Charles A. Satterlee of Ledyard,
118
Joseph Hutchins of Plainfield,
136
John D. Sullivan of Lisbon,
120
Charles W. Grosvenor of Pomfret,
136
H. C. Burnham of Lyme (Portrait),
119
Randolph L. Bullard of Pomfret,
136
John R. Sterling of Lyme (deceased),
120
George A. Hammond of Putnam,
136
Charles W. Comstock of Montville,
120
Charles N. Allen of Putnam (Portrait),
131
Thomas S. Wheeler of North Stonington,
120
Chauncey M. Smith of Scotland,
136
Edwin P. Chapman of North Stonington,
122
David S. Kenyon of Sterling,
136
Charles E. Peck of Old Lyme,
122
George T. Murdock of Thompson (Portrait),
133
Edwin Benjamin of Preston,
122
Frank H. Converse of Thompson,
136
Stephen D. Moore of Preston,
122
John G. Keigwin of Windham (Portrait),
135
J. Raymond Douglass of Salem,
124
Thomas H. Allen of Sprague,
124
Ebenezer P. Couch of Stonington (Portrait),
121
Peleg S. Barber of Stonington (Portrait),
123
Edmund Hall of Voluntown, 124
LITCHFIELD COUNTY.
Alvah A. Stone of Litchfield, 140
Asahel H. Morse of Litchfield,
140
Albert Perry of Barkhamsted, 140
James Tiffany of Barkhamsted,
140
Lucius Myron Slade of Bridgeport,
126
Frederick H. Thompson of Bethlehem, 140
Andrew P. Wakeman of Fairfield,
127
James Shannon of Bridgewater,
140
Thomas A. Lake of Woodstock,
137
John F. Hibbard of Woodstock,
138
John Robertson of Waterford, 124
FAIRFIELD COUNTY.
John J. Phelan of Bridgeport,
126
Walter G. Morrison of Windham,
137
Elias T. Clark of Woodbridge,
114
NEW LONDON COUNTY.
WINDHAM COUNTY.
Haschal F. Cox of Brooklyn, 132
George M. Wallace of Wallingford,
112
William E. Palmer of Ridgefield,
PAGE. 127
PAGE.
5
Samuel W. Bradley of Canaan,
140
Daniel C. Spencer of Old Saybrook ( Portrunif).
14:
James E. Stillman of Colebrook,
142
Andrew Cornwall of Portland, 150
Rollin D. Baldwin of Colebrook,
142
Milon Pratt of Saybrook, 151
Victory C. Beers of Cornwall,
142
Charles R. Marvin of Saybrook, 151
George H. Oldfield of Cornwall,
142
Albert B. Dibble of Westbrook,
151
Eugene E. Allyn of Goshen,
142
William J. Green of Goshen,
142
William Bryant of Harwinton,
142
Charles W. Bradley of Tolland,
15%
Silas A. Gridley of Harwinton,
142
Austin L. Edgerton of Tolland.
154
Charles S. Smith of Kent,
142
Asahel P. Lathrop of Andover, 154
Frank H. Turkington of Morris,
143
Charles N. Loomis of Bolton, 151
James Forbes of New Hartford,
143
Frank P. Collins of Columbia,
154
James B. Spencer of New Hartford,
143
Frederick D. Avery of Columbia,
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